...YOU are guilty of this, not someone else, YOU.
The following is the definition of "the pot calling the kettle black:"
"The pot calling the kettle black”
The core meaning of this proverbial saying refers to someone calling out a flaw or fault of someone else that they possess themselves. It is rooted in the hypocrisy and irony of the accusation or criticism, as this reflects a characteristic of the accuser themselves.
According to the definition, if I accused or criticized someone for a fault or flaw that I have myself, then I would be guilty of being the pot calling the kettle black, but I didn't.
Catholics are not beholden to argue from Sola Scriptura.
I never said that Catholics are beholden to argue from
Sola Scriptura. I spoke generally saying that anyone who teaches/believes that Mary hadn't taken a vow of perpetual virginity, and did give birth to other children, should provide scriptural evidence that they believe shows this, especially if they adhere to the
Sola Scriptura. Is that not true?
On the topic of timing, and the idea that Mary's "I am a virgin" protest indicated that she must have vowed to remain a virgin forever, given the angel didn't explicitly state when she would conceive the Messiah...
Firstly, again, I never said that Mary's conception would happen in the far future. Secondly, again, I never said that Mary's statement She's a virgin is the sole proof that She had taken a vow of perpetual virginity.
If Mary took a vow of perpetual chastity it raises other questions. Why would she get married at all, if she took such a vow? Why would Joseph, who presumably wanted heirs, take a wife who had taken a vow that would preclude her providing him with those heirs, as well as deprive him of the marital relations he would reasonably expect from his wife?
Joseph and Mary can be a difficult topic of discussion for two reasons:
(I) the four Gospels of Christ lack an extensive, much less complete, detailing of Joseph's and Mary's life
(II) many Christians automatically assume as false any details about Joseph and Mary that aren't found in the four Gospels of Christ
Regardless, I have the answers to your questions, which aren't found in the four Gospels of Christ, but rather
The Gospel as Revealed to Me, or
The Poem of the Man-God: Vols. I-V (a Work on the Life of Jesus), an expansion of the four Gospels by Jesus through His spokesperson, Maria Valtorta.
In 1943, Maria Valtorta began taking dictation from Jesus and other heavenly persons, as well as receiving scenes, or visions from the life of Jesus. At Jesus’ request, she wrote everything she saw and heard, filling 122 notebooks totaling 15,000 pages. Maria received most of the revelations before 1947, but they continued until 1953. Her writings were compiled into the following books:
The Gospel as Revealed to Me, or
The Poem of the Man-God: Vols. I–V (a Work on the Life of Jesus),
The Notebooks: 1943,
The Notebooks: 1944,
The Notebooks: 1945-1950,
The Little Notebooks,
The Lessons of St. Paul to the Romans, and
The Book of Azariah.
In the following chapters from
The Gospel as Revealed to Me, or
The Poem of the Man-God: Vol. I, are the scenes, or visions that Maria Valtorta received regarding Mary's Immaculate Conception, Her vow of virginity, Joseph accepting the Virgin as his wife, Joseph's vow of virginity, the marriage of Joseph and Mary, and the Annunciation.
5. The Birth of the Virgin Mary
6. The Purification of Anne and the Offering of Mary
7. The Son Has Put His Wisdom on His Mother's Lips
8. Mary is Presented in the Temple
11. Mary Will Confide Her Vow to the Spouse God Will Give Her
12. Joseph Is Appointed Husband of the Virgin
13. Wedding of the Virgin and Joseph
16. The Annunciation
I believe wholeheartedly that Maria Valtorta was Jesus's spokesperson, further validated by those who've analyzed and tested the credibility of her and her literary works. Below are just a few of those studies:
(I) The results from the
mathematical analysis of Maria Valtorta's Work by Professor Emilio Matricciani and Dr. Liberato De Caro, where they concluded:
In conclusion, what do these findings mean? That Maria Valtorta is such a good writer to be able to modulate the linguistic parameters in so many different ways and as a function of character of the plot and type of literary text, so as to cover almost the entire range of the Italian literature? Or that visions and dictations really occurred and she was only a mystical, very intelligent and talented “writing tool”? Of course, no answer grounded in science can be given to the latter question.
(II) The results from the
astronomical and meteorological analysis of Maria Valtorta's Work by Professor Emilio Matricciani and Dr. Liberato De Caro, where they concluded:
“It seems that she has written down observations and facts that really happened at the time of Jesus’ life, as a real witness of them would have done. The question arises, unsolved from a point of view exclusively rational, how all this is possible because what Maria Valtorta writes down cannot, in any way, be traced back to her fantasy or to her astronomical and meteorological knowledge. In conclusion, if from one hand the scientific inquire has evidenced all the surprising and unexpected results reported and discussed in this paper, on the other hand our actual scientific knowledge cannot readily explain how these results are possible.”
(III) In David Webster, M.Div.'s chapter "Proof by Geography and Topography and Archaeology" of
A Summa and Encyclopedia to Maria Valtorta’s Extraordinary Work, he relates:
“An additional line of incontrovertible evidence (which Valtorta was encouraged by Jesus to include for the benefit of “the difficult doctors” of the Church) deals with the vast amount of geographical, climatic, agricultural, historical, astronomical, and cartographical information given in her work. Authorities in these fields have verified the accuracy of what she has reported with appropriate astonishment. Valtorta accurately identifies this agricultural and climatic information that is often unique to Palestine with the appropriate calendar period which she often specifically identifies. Without any evidence of planning and with hardly any corrections, Valtorta ends up with a perfectly flowing 3½ year story line with Jesus appropriately in Jerusalem and Judea for Passover and Pentecost in all four spring seasons, and at the Tabernacles in all three fall seasons of His ministry. Valtorta shows Jesus to have traversed the land of Palestine from one end to another in at least six cycles (some 4,000 miles), ministering in some 350 named locations, including places in Palestine known only to specialized archaeologists. Not once, however, does she have Jesus (or any one of the other 500 characters) in a place inconsistent with either the story line or distance or timing necessities.”
(IV) In professional engineer Jean-François Lavère's
The Valtorta Enigma, he writes:
“The work [The Poem of the Man-God] overflows with exact data from the viewpoint of history, topography, architecture, geography, ethnology, chronology, etc. Furthermore, Maria Valtorta often provides precise details known only by some scholars, and in certain cases, she even records details totally unknown at the time she recorded them, and which archeology, history, or science have later confirmed.”
Note: If you research Maria Valtorta, you'll find websites/articles in support of and in opposition to her and her writings. Over the past decade, I believe I've familiarized myself with them all, and have come to own and read all of her writings. Therefore, I'm here to answer any questions, etc.